THE EDITED PRESS RELEASE: “Standing out against the layers of noises a city like New York holds is no small feat: Its blaring cars and screeching trains, its storied streets, blunt locals, and piercing sirens all meld together into a thick backdrop. The Muckers, a four piece as vibrantly fresh as resolutely timeless, are doing just that, so it’s no wonder they’ve already been dubbed “one of New York’s most exciting new bands.”
Their debut album, the aptly titled Endeavor, comes on the heels of frontman Emir Mohseni’s journey (nothing short of an odyssey, really) as an immigrant taking refuge in New York City from his native Iran to have the right to perform rock music, then as a band caught in the global pandemic who’s had to let go of their greatest strength: thriving on any stage — from supporting Pond on the road in 1,000-cap rooms to making the crowds dance and sweat in the divey bars of Brooklyn.
“There are times in your life when you know the map to your destination but you need a force to drive you there,” Mohseni says of his move to the United States. Upon landing in this new environment, he met the three guys that would become his closest friends, and build with him the enlivening sound and enrapturing live show that The Muckers have garnered early praises for: Anthony Azarmgin at the bass, Chris Cawley on rhythm guitar, and John Zimmerman behind the drums.
The band’s ethos can be heard in tracks like the unrelenting Roll The Dice which Mohseni says is about “risking everything you have in life for that one thing that you love the most.” In the face of adversity, The Muckers have never let up their ambition, cutting through the noise with music that has been praised as “a call to fans to kick the dust off of their souls and boogie.”